University of British Columbia Press
Defending Rights in Russia
Lawyers, the State, and Legal Reform in the Post-Soviet Era
9780774811637
9780774811620
Distributed for University of British Columbia Press
Defending Rights in Russia
Lawyers, the State, and Legal Reform in the Post-Soviet Era
Pamela Jordan’s engaging study of the Russian bar (advokatura) provides a richly textured portrait of how, after the USSR’s collapse, practising lawyers called advocates began to assume new, self-defined roles as contributors to legal reform and defenders of rights in Russia. Jordan argues that the post-Soviet advokatura as an institution gained more, although not complete, autonomy from the state as it struggled to redefine itself as a profession and suggests that advocates’ work is supporting the growth of civil society and the strengthening of human rights in Russia. However, she also warns that such gains could be reversed if the Putin regime continues to flout due process rights.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. The Russian and Soviet Bars: A Historical Perspective, 1864-1984
2. The Advokatura in the Gorbachev Period, 1985-91
3. Chaos in the Advokatura, 1992-2002
4. Autonomy and Dependence: State-Bar Relations in the 1990s
5. Restructuring the Advokatura from Above, 2002-3
6. Russian Criminal Defence Advocacy in the Post-Soviet Era
7. New Trends in Advocates’ Practice in the Civil Sphere
Conclusion
Appendices
1 Surveys of Advocates’ Opinions /
2 Stages of a Russian Criminal Case /
Notes /
Selected Bibliography /
Index /